Republican Gov. Phil Scott Tuesday disputed allegations from the Trump administration that Vermont is illegally providing safe haven to undocumented immigrants.
As first reported by , U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi sent a letter to Scott last week saying Vermont had been identified as a sanctuary jurisdiction whose policies and practices thwart federal immigration enforcement to the detriment of the interests of the United States.
This ends now, Bondi wrote.
Bondi gave Scott until Tuesday to share his plans to eliminate laws, policies and practices that impede federal immigration enforcement. She said the state faces financial consequences, including the loss of federal grants, if it doesnt comply.
Under President Trumps leadership, full cooperation by state and local governments in immigration enforcement is a top priority, Bondi wrote.
About 30 other jurisdictions received similar notices this week.
In a response to Bondi Tuesday, Scott said he believes Vermonts designation as a sanctuary state has been made in error.
Vermont does not have any law or policy that impedes the enforcement of federal immigration law, he wrote. "In fact, the opposite is true.
Bondi did not reference any specific Vermont laws in her letter. But she alleged that Vermont is violating two federal codes 8 U.S.C. 禮禮 1373 and 1644 that say states and municipalities cant prohibit their law enforcement officers from sending information about a persons citizenship or immigration status to federal immigration authorities.
Ava Ayers, an associate professor at Albany Law School, surmises that the Trump administrations qualms might be with two state laws. One requires all Vermont law enforcement agencies to adopt whats known as a fair and impartial policing policy. The other requires local agencies to get the governors approval before they enter into contracts with federal authorities that involve immigration enforcement.
Calling Bondis legal argument thin, Ayers described the letter as an attempt to bully states into participating in Trumps deportation campaign.
In my experience in state government, there are always folks who want to be cautious and folks who want to defend their principles, Ayers said Tuesday. And I think a letter like this is designed to empower the folks who want to be cautious, who want to say, Lets do everything we can to steer clear of this federal beast thats breathing at our door.
Vermonts fair and impartial policing policy prohibits state and local police from asking about a persons immigration status, unless its relevant to a criminal investigation. It also prohibits officers from sharing personally identifying information about the person with federal immigration authorities, such as their physical address, license plate information, release date, or other information that federal authorities could use to locate someone who may be in the country illegally.
It would be much easier to do mass deportations if you had significant assistance from state and local law enforcement than if you have to rely on federal resources aloneIlya Somin
Jay Diaz is an attorney who formerly worked at the Vermont chapter of the ACLU, where he helped negotiate the policy.
Diaz said the policy was intentionally crafted not to conflict with the federal codes Bondi referenced. As Scott noted in his letter to the attorney general, Vermont law says that any state or local law enforcement policy that conflicts with those federal codes is automatically abolished.
Vermont has effectively adopted a policy of noninvolvement with federal immigration law, Diaz continued, and while the Trump administration may be seeking full cooperation, states are under no legal obligation to provide it.
Ilya Somin, a professor at George Mason Universitys Antonin Scalia Law School, said theres a reason the Trump administration wants to enlist local law enforcement agencies in its mass deportation agenda. Local police officers vastly outnumber agents at U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
It would be much easier to do mass deportations if you had significant assistance from state and local law enforcement than if you have to rely on federal resources alone, Somin said Tuesday.
Somin said efforts by the Trump administration to compel states to participate in the federal governments immigration enforcement campaign violate federal law.
Supreme Court precedent, ironically written mostly by conservative justices, says that the federal government cannot commandeer state and local law enforcement to aid in the enforcement of federal law, Somin said.
Somin, whos also a scholar at the Cato Institute, said state policies that limit police involvement in federal immigration enforcement are in their residents economic interest.
Undocumented people make important contributions to the economy in many sectors and so deporting them is harmful, he said.
Somin said immigrants are also statistically less likely to commit crimes.
Diaz said Vermonts policy of noninvolvement with federal immigration authorities also helps local police build relationships with immigrant communities that advance the core public safety mission.
If people think theres going to be immigration consequences, that theyre going to be put in jail when theyre the victim, then theyre not going to talk to us, Diaz said.
Vermont Attorney General Charity Clarks office said in a written statement Tuesday that shes been in communication with the governors office about Bondis letter and that it remains unclear why the state was listed as a sanctuary jurisdiction.
During Trumps first term, his administration tried to cut off key federal grants to so-called sanctuary cities that didnt provide desired cooperation with federal immigration authorities.
A federal judge struck down that policy.
Somin said he believes any attempts to coerce states to increase cooperation now, via the threat of financial sanctions, will meet with the same fate.